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4

Consider this line:

if (object.getAttribute("someAttr").equals("true")) { // ....

Obviously this line is a potential bug, the attribute might be null and we will get a NullPointerException. So we need to refactor it to one of two choices:

First option:

if ("true".equals(object.getAttribute("someAttr"))) { // ....

Second option:

String attr = object.getAttribute("someAttr");
if (attr != null) {
    if (attr.equals("true")) { // ....

The first option is awkward to read but more concise, while the second one is clear in intent, but verbose.

Which option do you prefer in terms of readability?

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7 Answers

vote up 14 vote down check

I've always used

if ("true".equals(object.getAttribute("someAttr"))) { // ....

because although it is a little more difficult to read it's much less verbose and I think it's readable enough so you get used to it very easily

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2  
I don't even think this is more difficult to read. – TM Jun 8 at 11:52
vote up -2 vote down

It's a very good question. I usually use the not graceful:

if (object.getAttribute("someAttr") != null && object.getAttribute("someAttr").equals("true")) { // ....

(and I will not use it anymore)

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4  
Nice! What if getAttribute() actually have side effects? Sometimes you're running it once, sometimes you're running it twice. – Vincent Robert Jun 8 at 12:02
I might wrote this in the "Common programming errors" question I've seen over here – victor hugo Jun 8 at 23:47
Thanks for the comments. I knew it was no good, I am here to learn things like this one. One more question: what is the problem with this approach if getAttribute() is just a standard getter method - and so has no side-effects? – alexmeia Jun 11 at 11:09
+1 I think some people don't read the text, just the code. @question in comment: It might have a side effect at a later time. Unlikely to cause too serious damage in getters, but possible. Could result in performance loss, for example, if it returns calculated data in the next version - especially if this code is everywhere. – soulmerge Jun 18 at 8:50
thanks soulmerge, I understand the problem. I think stackoverflow is great for things like this one. – alexmeia Jul 9 at 13:23
vote up 1 vote down

There are certain situations where the concise approach feels wrong to start with but effectively becomes idiomatic. This is one of them; the other is something like:

String line;
while ((line = bufferedReader.readLine()) != null) {
  // Use line
}

Side effects in a condition? Unthinkable! Except it's basically nicer than the alternatives, when you recognise the particular pattern.

This pattern is similar - it's so common in Java that I'd expect any reasonably experienced developer to recognise it. The result is pleasantly concise. (Amusingly, I sometimes see C# code which uses the same idiom, unnecessarily - the equality operator works fine with strings in C#.)

Bottom line: use the first version, and become familiar with it.

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vote up 1 vote down

Always aspire for shorter code, given that both are functionaly equivalent. Especially in case like this where readability is not sacrificed.

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vote up 10 vote down

In the second option, you can take advantage of short-circuiting &&:

String attr = object.getAttribute("someAttr");
if (attr != null && attr.equals("true")) { // ....
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1  
Indeed you can, but it is optimisation favored to readibility, always a bad idea. – David Pierre Jun 8 at 9:06
3  
Huh, favours optimisation? I think, on the contrary, that this is slightly more readable than option 1. – Jonik Jun 8 at 9:15
Yes - style issues do not have definitive answers. It's what you have used to. Personally I've accustomed to this style since it also works in many other languages deriving syntax from C/C++. And if your organization/project has a code convention, follow its recommendations. – laalto Jun 8 at 9:18
6  
It's not an "optimization", nor less readable. I'd argue that having two if clauses is actually far less readable, since you end up with more nested blocks than you actually need. The double ifs also open up a window for the infamous "2ifs1else" bug: "if (a) if (b) print("a and b"); else print("not a and b"); – gustafc Jun 8 at 9:23
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Util.isEmpty(string) - returns string == null || string.trim().isEmpty() Util.notNull(string) returns "" if string == null, string otherwise. Util.isNotEmpty(string) returns ! Util.isEmpty(string)

And we have a convention that for strings, Util.isEmpty(string) semantically means true and Util.isNotEmpty(string) semantically means false.

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vote up 1 vote down

I like option 1 and I would argue that it is readable enough.

Option 3 btw would be to introduce a getAttribute method that takes a default value as a parameter.

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This question is about the 'if' block so about your option 3: "You can't always rely the method will not ever return a null value – victor hugo Jun 8 at 9:02
Of course you can ensure that it never returns null for a default value. – willcodejavaforfood Jun 8 at 9:05
Option 3 would be all about moving the error handling and null checks into a method according to DRY. – willcodejavaforfood Jun 8 at 9:05
I agree but what I meant is that you not always test methods you've written so you can't rely the return value won't be null – victor hugo Jun 8 at 16:12
@Victor H Valle - Ummmmmmmm – willcodejavaforfood Jun 8 at 20:24

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